F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Is my hdd bottlenecking my pc

Is my hdd bottlenecking my pc

Is my hdd bottlenecking my pc

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DecoGamerEz
Member
212
01-01-2017, 11:15 PM
#11
i will. Thankss
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DecoGamerEz
01-01-2017, 11:15 PM #11

i will. Thankss

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163
01-05-2017, 06:36 AM
#12
I concur with FloRolf, it seems you have enough RAM, so after the game starts, it should mostly access your memory rather than your hard drive.
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XExtremeGamerX
01-05-2017, 06:36 AM #12

I concur with FloRolf, it seems you have enough RAM, so after the game starts, it should mostly access your memory rather than your hard drive.

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Garrie2007
Junior Member
6
01-05-2017, 12:12 PM
#13
I had a budget of 300$ and I managed to get everything from the list except HDD and GPU. Now I can't get any more RAM, what should I do?
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Garrie2007
01-05-2017, 12:12 PM #13

I had a budget of 300$ and I managed to get everything from the list except HDD and GPU. Now I can't get any more RAM, what should I do?

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ChibiDusk
Member
164
01-11-2017, 08:55 AM
#14
The previous time I experienced this issue, my graphics card was the main cause. It was producing a very loud coil whine occasionally, and the frame rate would drop significantly.
A hard drive will only affect a computer’s performance when data needs to be read from or written to the disk. For actual gaming and similar tasks, the HDD shouldn’t be involved much at all.
Another possibility is that you might be approaching a thermal limit. You won’t understand what’s happening until you install monitoring software and observe the hardware behavior during these drops.
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ChibiDusk
01-11-2017, 08:55 AM #14

The previous time I experienced this issue, my graphics card was the main cause. It was producing a very loud coil whine occasionally, and the frame rate would drop significantly.
A hard drive will only affect a computer’s performance when data needs to be read from or written to the disk. For actual gaming and similar tasks, the HDD shouldn’t be involved much at all.
Another possibility is that you might be approaching a thermal limit. You won’t understand what’s happening until you install monitoring software and observe the hardware behavior during these drops.

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Razlorus
Posting Freak
976
01-12-2017, 04:20 PM
#15
Your configuration is decent. I own an overclocked RX 570, similar to your RX 480. I also have a Ryzen 5 2400g with 8 GB of 3200mhz memory, which suits 1080p and some VR games well. For better performance, I’d consider switching to an SSD. I store movies, music, and games on an HDD for fast loading, but it struggles with Windows 10 and heavy games. Now it loads in under three seconds.
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Razlorus
01-12-2017, 04:20 PM #15

Your configuration is decent. I own an overclocked RX 570, similar to your RX 480. I also have a Ryzen 5 2400g with 8 GB of 3200mhz memory, which suits 1080p and some VR games well. For better performance, I’d consider switching to an SSD. I store movies, music, and games on an HDD for fast loading, but it struggles with Windows 10 and heavy games. Now it loads in under three seconds.

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xFunnyman
Member
192
01-12-2017, 11:35 PM
#16
I own this exact HDD and have never faced any problems since 2016. I even added a second 3TB Toshiba HDD of the same model because it has performed exactly as anticipated. You experience fps drops mainly due to game optimization and session size. Your current hardware handles Fortnite well—actually, you don’t need a GPU with your 2400G to maintain around 90 fps. Have you possibly adjusted any graphics settings? They significantly improve performance. Use these if you haven’t already tried...
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xFunnyman
01-12-2017, 11:35 PM #16

I own this exact HDD and have never faced any problems since 2016. I even added a second 3TB Toshiba HDD of the same model because it has performed exactly as anticipated. You experience fps drops mainly due to game optimization and session size. Your current hardware handles Fortnite well—actually, you don’t need a GPU with your 2400G to maintain around 90 fps. Have you possibly adjusted any graphics settings? They significantly improve performance. Use these if you haven’t already tried...

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Xephtor
Member
192
01-14-2017, 08:33 PM
#17
Hard drives only cause performance issues when the game is sending data from them. This tends to be a bigger concern for open-world games, though I think developers have improved their methods for handling data streaming now.
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Xephtor
01-14-2017, 08:33 PM #17

Hard drives only cause performance issues when the game is sending data from them. This tends to be a bigger concern for open-world games, though I think developers have improved their methods for handling data streaming now.

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Renders
Member
67
01-16-2017, 06:15 AM
#18
The sole issues with HDDS arise in games where you add content. A clear case is Fallout 4, where building settlements and settlers eventually causes noticeable delays as you near a settlement. Continuing to expand leads to stuttering performance. In similar situations, Skyrim behaves the same when mods introduce extra clutter and NPCs. Flight simulators are another example, allowing custom airplanes, scenery, and airports to be added. HDD performance varies too; most are built for quick data transfers, while premium models handle larger volumes faster. I checked websites such as https://techreport.com/ to find HDD reviews. For gaming purposes, prioritize HDDs with high burst read speeds and fast random access times. With the drop in prices for large SSDs, top-tier HDDs are now less appealing. The most effective upgrade remains a 1tb SSD priced around $100.
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Renders
01-16-2017, 06:15 AM #18

The sole issues with HDDS arise in games where you add content. A clear case is Fallout 4, where building settlements and settlers eventually causes noticeable delays as you near a settlement. Continuing to expand leads to stuttering performance. In similar situations, Skyrim behaves the same when mods introduce extra clutter and NPCs. Flight simulators are another example, allowing custom airplanes, scenery, and airports to be added. HDD performance varies too; most are built for quick data transfers, while premium models handle larger volumes faster. I checked websites such as https://techreport.com/ to find HDD reviews. For gaming purposes, prioritize HDDs with high burst read speeds and fast random access times. With the drop in prices for large SSDs, top-tier HDDs are now less appealing. The most effective upgrade remains a 1tb SSD priced around $100.

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